DAVIS, Calif. — Natalie Corona was a rising star in her police department with a sparkling smile and a huge heart who had followed in her father's footsteps and became an officer, fulfilling a lifelong dream just a few months ago when her dad pinned the badge on her uniform.
On Friday, her father and a stunned community mourned the 22-year-old who was shot and killed on duty while responding to a multi-vehicle crash in the small college town of Davis, California. Investigators believe she was ambushed by a gunman on a bicycle, but they haven't a determined the motive for his actions.
"She's the cop that any community would want," said Lt. Paul Doroshov, a spokesman for the Davis Police Department. "Everybody who met her liked her."
The shooter rode up on a bicycle and, without warning, opened fire as Corona was investigating a three-car crash in the town that is home to the University of California in Davis, where there has not been a fatal police shooting in nearly 60 years. She was struck in the neck.
"This looked clearly to us like am ambush," Police Chief Davis Police Chief Darren Pytel said Friday evening.
At least two witnesses avoided injury. A firefighter who ran away as the gunman reloaded was hit, but the bullet didn't penetrate his boot. A woman carrying a backpack found a bullet lodged in her textbook.
After unloading gunshots, the suspect went to his home nearby and chatted with his roommate without "showing any sign he was involved in the incident," Pytel said.
A backpack dropped at the crime scene led officers to identify the gunman. During a short standoff outside his residence, the man came out with a bulletproof vest before going back inside, where he pushed a couch to block the front door and turned the gun on himself, Pytel said.